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Ancillary Sword Discussion - Spoilers Ahoy
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Recommend me some classic or hard science fiction
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What Members Thought

Rereading now after several decades. At 25%. I'll be interested to see if I still feel it's 5 stars after so many years.
Finished. I think that dates this is not the subject-which is certainly apropos for today- but the pacing. While I have read thoughtful slowly paced specific books (The Wanderers and Good Morning Midnight come to mind) this journey across the literal and figurative ice feels long. I personally found the aspects of geology engaging and, of course, the contemplation of the 'other ...more
Finished. I think that dates this is not the subject-which is certainly apropos for today- but the pacing. While I have read thoughtful slowly paced specific books (The Wanderers and Good Morning Midnight come to mind) this journey across the literal and figurative ice feels long. I personally found the aspects of geology engaging and, of course, the contemplation of the 'other ...more

Reread this for my SF/F class on Coursera. I loved it more, this time: read it slowly, appreciated the details, just as the professor suggested. Partially because, of course, I knew it would be rewarding with Ursula Le Guin. I don't think I was ready for this book when I read it before: the fierce joy and love in some parts of it, the devastation, the making-strange of familiar things and the making familiar of strange things.
Some parts were... maybe less subtle than I thought Le Guin would be. ...more
Some parts were... maybe less subtle than I thought Le Guin would be. ...more

I love the idea of this book, but I could of a world when the beings were gender less and raceless, plus I don't care much for LeGuin's politics.
...more

Considered a classic, I had a tough time getting pulled in until about halfway through. The language and writing style (when speaking from the perspective of the aliens) is stiff and formal and the use of so many alien-sounding names and references meant I was not retaining much at first. It wasn't until the long trip across the ice that the book really became compelling for me. 2 stars for the first half, 4 stars for the second half. But I did love the concept of a genderless planet and the wor
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Ursula K. Le Guin is often cited as a SF master, and with good reason. She brings to the genre a total mastery of its concepts, and adds to it a sensibility and feminity that is often lacking. Make no mistake : Le Guin is years ahead of the usual 'romance SF' that is (often unjustly) linked to SF women writers. Her books are merciless, intellectual, poignant, and complex.
The Left Hand of Darkness stands as the epitome of all these qualities, and is often cited as Le Guin's masterpiece. I have no ...more
The Left Hand of Darkness stands as the epitome of all these qualities, and is often cited as Le Guin's masterpiece. I have no ...more

2025: Probably my 3rd time reading this one, but the first in a very long time. Left Hand is a fascinating thought experiment/character study about gender, of course, but this time around I'm more intrigued by the very clever way that Le Guin creates an unreliable narrator via his own perceived competence. Genly Ai has been trained to be an envoy, to make first contact and guide this alien world into conversation and membership with the greater universal Ekumen, he's studied the language and bel
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Apr 26, 2011
Tamara
rated it
it was amazing
Shelves:
sf,
author-female,
distant-planet,
lgbt-content,
political,
gender,
feminism,
soft-sf,
ice-age,
westeros-superlative-sci-fi


Jul 03, 2023
Wealhtheow
rated it
it was ok
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
sci-fi,
queer-characters

Jan 20, 2013
Susan
marked it as to-read

Jul 08, 2013
Steelwhisper
marked it as to-read

Jan 01, 2014
Figgy
marked it as owned-but-not-read
